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  5. Rivers, Roads, and Rails: The Influence of Transportation Needs and Internal Improvements on Cherokee Treaties and Removal from 1779 to 1838
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Rivers, Roads, and Rails: The Influence of Transportation Needs and Internal Improvements on Cherokee Treaties and Removal from 1779 to 1838

Date Issued
December 1, 2007
Author(s)
Rozema, Vicki Bell  
Advisor(s)
Daniel Feller
Additional Advisor(s)
Lorri Glover, Stephen V. Ash
Abstract

This study examines the importance of transportation routes and internal improvements as factors in treaty negotiations and the removal of the Cherokees. Covering a period from approximately 1779 to 1838, the date of forced Cherokee removal from east of the Mississippi, it argues that the Cherokees opposed the construction of military roads and turnpikes and interfered with travel through Cherokee country. Safe passage clauses in Cherokee treaties, issues dealing with passports through Cherokee country, and disputes over ferries and taverns on transportation routes are reviewed. The plans of Southern leaders such as John C. Calhoun and Wilson Lumpkin to build canals and railroads through the Cherokee Nation are explored. Euro-Americans perceived the Cherokee Nation as an obstacle to economic trade and commercial transportation.

Disciplines
History
United States History
Degree
Master of Arts
Major
History
Link to full text
http://etd.utk.edu/2007/RozemaVicki.pdf
Embargo Date
December 1, 2011
File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

RozemaVicki.pdf

Size

535.92 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

3a115a254ee167594c54dc3b3c81d39c

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